Physics, asked by AdityaDasgupta36, 1 year ago

state gravitational unit



aman34034: m/s
hargun11204: Plz mark brainliesf
hargun11204: brainliest

Answers

Answered by hargun11204
0
The gravitational metric system is a non-standard system of units, which does not comply with the International System of Units(SI). It is built on the three base quantities length, time and force with base units metre, second and kilopond respectively.The gravity of Earth, which is denoted by g, refers to the acceleration that is imparted to objects due to the distribution of mass within Earth. In SI units this acceleration is measured in metres per second squared (in symbols, m/s2 or m. s−2) or equivalently in newtons per kilogram (N/kg or N. kg−1).
Answered by monica789412
0

Gravitational unit of force is denoted as 'g' whose value is g=6.67259 x 10-11 N m^2/kg^2

Explanation:

In SI method, the unit of force is - Newton.

From the formula F = ma, if M = 1 kg and a = 1 m / s^2 then F = 1 newton. Thus, 1 Newton force is the force, which is 1 kg. Produce an acceleration of 1 m / s^2 in an object of mass. Like this-

1 newton = 1 kg Meter / second^2

The other unit of force is kg-weight. This force is called the GRAVITATIONAL UNIT, which is 1 kg. Due to gravity on the object of. According to Newton's Second Law -

Gravitational force = mass × gravitational acceleration

Weight W is a force, so its unit is Newton. Unit kg of mass M, the gravitational acceleration is Newton / kg. It can also be expressed this way.

To learn more visit, https://brainly.in/question/6329222

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